4.5 Review

COMMUNITY RESPONSES TO CONTAMINANTS: USING BASIC ECOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES TO PREDICT ECOTOXICOLOGICAL EFFECTS

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY
Volume 28, Issue 9, Pages 1789-1800

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1897/09-140.1

Keywords

Community ecotoxicology; Contaminant transport; Global change; Indirect effects; Resistance/resilience

Funding

  1. U. S. Environmental Protection Agency [R832441]
  2. National Science Foundation [DEB 0516227]
  3. U. S. Department of Agriculture [NRI 2006-01370, 2009-35102-05043]
  4. U. S. EPA [STAR R833835]
  5. EPA [909070, R832441] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
  6. NIFA [2009-35102-05043, 583481] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
  7. Division Of Environmental Biology
  8. Direct For Biological Sciences [0809487] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Community ecotoxicology is defined as the study of the effects of contaminants on patterns of species abundance, diversity, community composition, and species interactions. Recent discoveries that species diversity is positively associated with ecosystem stability, recovery, and services have made a community-level perspective on ecotoxicology more important than ever. Community ecotoxicology must explicitly consider both present and impending global change and shift from a purely descriptive to a more predictive science. Greater consideration of the ecological factors and threshold responses that determine community resistance and resilience should improve our ability to predict how and when communities will respond to, and recover from, xenobiotics. A better understanding of pollution-induced community tolerance, and of the costs of this tolerance, should facilitate identifying contaminant-impacted communities, thus forecasting the ecological consequences of contaminant exposure and determining the restoration effectiveness. Given the vast complexity of community ecotoxicology, simplifying assumptions, such as the possibility that the approximately 100,000 registered chemicals could be reduced to a more manageable number of contaminant classes with similar modes of action, must be identified and validated. In addition to providing a framework for predicting contaminant fate and effects, food-web ecology can help to identify communities that are sensitive to contaminants, contaminants that are particularly insidious to communities, and species that are crucial for transmitting adverse effects across trophic levels. Integration of basic ecological principles into the design and implementation of ecotoxicological research is essential for predicting contaminant effects within the context of rapidly changing, global environmental conditions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available